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United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 18:52 Go to next message
warranto is currently offline  warranto
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[Updated on: Wed, 16 November 2005 18:52]

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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179456 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 18:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179457 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 18:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Jecht is currently offline  Jecht
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I also heard they use a mixture of potassium nitrate, sulfur, and carbon. How dare they?????

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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179458 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cheesesoda is currently offline  cheesesoda
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Are restaurants using a dangerous chemical to season their foods? This "seasoning" uses a mixture of sodium, a highly explosive metal, and chlorine, a green toxic gas, to create this agent they claim adds flavor to food. Should this be allowed? Your thoughts?

Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179459 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
warranto is currently offline  warranto
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hmm.. sounds like sarcasm.

Perhaps if chemicals are allowed to be used in food, perhaps Saddam should be allowed to use them on people as well.
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179461 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cheesesoda is currently offline  cheesesoda
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How about that this is simply an incindiary device to clear out an area? Sure, it has side effects, but it's war. It's not a weapon meant to kill (many) people. Instead, it's to clear out an area. The insurgents were going to die by gunfire anyways, so death is a little bit heavier of a side effect than it burning the skin.

Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179463 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
warranto is currently offline  warranto
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If it's not such a big deal, then why the hype with the military stressing that it "has not been used as a weapon", and alligations of an unknown number of iraqi women and children dying from phosphorus burns during the hostilities?
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179464 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cheesesoda is currently offline  cheesesoda
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Because the media takes things out of context like this and turns it into negative as soon and as harshly as it can? Do you wonder why we never hear anything positive about the war? Not because there is no positive, but rather because the media chooses not to discuss the good progressions of it.

Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179467 is a reply to message #179463] Wed, 16 November 2005 19:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
NeoSaber is currently offline  NeoSaber
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warranto wrote on Wed, 16 November 2005 21:19

If it's not such a big deal, then why the hype with the military stressing that it "has not been used as a weapon", and alligations of an unknown number of iraqi women and children dying from phosphorus burns during the hostilities?


Good question, I really want to know how a news organization can get away with writing something like this:

Quote:

An unknown number of Iraqi women and children died of phosphorus burns during the hostilities, Italian documentary makers covering the battle for Fallujah have claimed.


This means just about anything someone wants it to mean. It could mean no one was even hurt, or it could mean hundreds or thousands were murdered. It doesn't even state if anyone has actual evidence this happened. Taken at face value, it says no one knows if anyone was hurt. It's a useless statement, but seems to be used to hype up a story that doesn't deserve the bytes wasted to store it. Reporters should be reporting facts, not making up new ways to say nothing.

This kind of crap drives me crazy.


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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179476 is a reply to message #179464] Wed, 16 November 2005 21:13 Go to previous messageGo to next message
warranto is currently offline  warranto
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j_ball430 wrote on Wed, 16 November 2005 19:24

Because the media takes things out of context like this and turns it into negative as soon and as harshly as it can? Do you wonder why we never hear anything positive about the war? Not because there is no positive, but rather because the media chooses not to discuss the good progressions of it.


Meh. Just passing the news along. However white phosphorus has been used, and it is a chemical compound that burns skin to the bone. Used against insurgents or not, I'm sure that America would be up in arms (no pun intended) if the insurgents were to use mustard gas.
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179488 is a reply to message #179455] Thu, 17 November 2005 00:17 Go to previous messageGo to next message
NukeIt15 is currently offline  NukeIt15
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White Phosphorous works as a weapon because of simple combustion. WP+Oxygen=fire. Chunks of WP, when they strike a person, do have a nasty tendency to burn straight through the skin and any other flammable matter between it and the ground, but that's all it does- it burns. The end result is quite similar to what would happen if you used a cutting torch on, say, your arm or leg.

Yes, it's nasty stuff, but it does not affect the human body in the same way that, say, a nerve or blister agent would. Chemical weapons generally have far more specific and targeted effects on the human body- a nerve agent, such as sarin for example, attacks the central nervous system, disrupting and shutting down signals sent from the brain to various body parts (incapacitating, then killing the target person). Blister agents, such as mustard agent, adversely accect surface tissues which they are exposed to- which is why it is such a bad thing to inhale them, as they will completely wreck your lungs in very short order.

Phosphorous is a simple incendiary device. It burns. It burns, and continues to burn very hot for an extended period, while giving off a bright, intense light- which is why WP and RP have been used in signal and illumination flares for centuries (...and the rockets' red glare...). It is not a chemical weapon any more than gunpowder, C4, napalm, or TNT. Chemical weapons have specific, targeted effects on specific bodily functions and tissues; WP just burns anything that gets in its way. Phosphorous ordinance is not specifically designed to destroy human flesh; it just happens to do that pretty damn well in addition to everything else it is good for (lighting things on fire, illuminating an area, alerting a rescue chopper to the location of a downed pilot, etc).

WP is not a chemical weapon, it is conventional, and this is stupid- next thing you know, people will be bitching about bullets being chemical weapons because they might have lead in them. Just another case of somebody trying to demonize the US by attacking some weapon that your average person really doesn't have a clue about the inner workings of.


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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179510 is a reply to message #179455] Thu, 17 November 2005 07:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
warranto is currently offline  warranto
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meh, it was brought up in the news, being portraied badly, by the military no less, that it was something that finally had to be admitted to. The Ambassador even comparing the use of white phosphorus to the use of napalm.

I could care less about its use, I know it's used regularily with non-lethal intent. As I said, just passing on the news. (And providing a counterpoint since no one else seems to be doing it)
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179529 is a reply to message #179455] Thu, 17 November 2005 10:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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I don't think the point is as much that it was being used as it was REPORTED that it wasn't being used offensively, which turned out to be false.


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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179698 is a reply to message #179529] Fri, 18 November 2005 15:12 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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The worst thing to ever happen to America is the media. They are buyest, lieing jerks. If its not Fox its News Week. You were right, the media only shows negitive news on the war. This sells. Like at the Spanish American War. If you know your history you will know wtf im talkign about. The people who are most for this war are the soldiers on the ground. Why? because they see the good they do every day, the people they help. Where is the media there?

The UN doesnt consider them Chemical Weapons. So there ya go.


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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179713 is a reply to message #179529] Fri, 18 November 2005 17:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Hydra is currently offline  Hydra
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Javaxcx wrote on Thu, 17 November 2005 12:55

I don't think the point is as much that it was being used as it was REPORTED that it wasn't being used offensively, which turned out to be false.

And whose fault is that, the U.S. government's, or the media's?

This is just conjecture, but the reason the military didn't tell the public it was using white phosphorous probably is because the public isn't widely educated about the use of white phosphorous as a conventional weapon, so it would be easy for the media to spin the story, making it look like the United States is using chemical weapons. In response, Congress restricts the military from using white phosphorous, thus depriving the military from a useful conventional weapon.

Plus, the public doesn't need to know everything the military does and everything it uses to fight our enemies. Should we be afraid we aren't giving the enemy a fair fight? Of course not. This is war; the military exists to win wars and kill our enemies. The more we tie the military's hands, the harder it is for it to win our wars.

And before the Geneva Convention comes up, wasn't it created in the first place with the idea that both sides would adhere to its rules so both sides' POWs would be treated humanely? Even if the terrorists were addressed in some article of the Convention, they have already violated many provisions of it, from torturing prisoners to beheading hostages. They're not following the same rules of war that we are, so it is useless to say that we'll only make them more mad if we break a few GC rules. They won't stop beheading hostages even if we let all the detainees in Guantanamo Bay go. They're out to win this war at any cost, and they'll fight dirty if they have to. Our refusal to meet them likewise is only a weakness that will seriously hinder our ability to win.


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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179716 is a reply to message #179455] Fri, 18 November 2005 17:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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"All's fair in love and war."

Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179726 is a reply to message #179713] Fri, 18 November 2005 19:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Hydra wrote on Fri, 18 November 2005 19:21

Javaxcx wrote on Thu, 17 November 2005 12:55

I don't think the point is as much that it was being used as it was REPORTED that it wasn't being used offensively, which turned out to be false.

And whose fault is that, the U.S. government's, or the media's?



The media's. That's why I emphasized the word "reported".



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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #179973 is a reply to message #179455] Mon, 21 November 2005 03:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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I hear the US military is outfitting many of its soldiers with weapons that fire a dense compound that has been shown to cause brain damage, especially in the young (clearly targetting Iraq's youth and thus impeding its future generations). I don't know why the media hasn't pounced on this the way they pounce on depleted uranium, because it's clearly the next hot topic.

I mean, come on; if you wouldn't let lead be in your gas or in your paint, would you dare let the government use it in bullets? Rocked Over Damn chemical warfare.
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180104 is a reply to message #179973] Tue, 22 November 2005 12:34 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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We dont use lead bullets, we use mettal bullets.

"Don't try to be a great man, just be a man. Let history make it's own judgments."

"Maybe its not the destination that matters, but the journey."

"How many people does it take before its wrong? A thousand? Fifty thousand? A million?"

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"Its not the end or even the beggining of the end, mearly the end of the beggining."

"Logic is the beginning of wisdom; not the end."
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180219 is a reply to message #179455] Wed, 23 November 2005 14:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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I've used white Phosphorous in chemistry lab a number of times, its fun, and i THINK it burns brightly
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180634 is a reply to message #180104] Mon, 28 November 2005 00:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Chronojam is currently offline  Chronojam
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runewood wrote on Tue, 22 November 2005 14:34

We dont use lead bullets, we use mettal bullets.

Do you realize what you just said? Huh
Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180976 is a reply to message #179458] Thu, 01 December 2005 11:00 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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j_ball430 wrote on Wed, 16 November 2005 21:05

Are restaurants using a dangerous chemical to season their foods? This "seasoning" uses a mixture of sodium, a highly explosive metal, and chlorine, a green toxic gas, to create this agent they claim adds flavor to food. Should this be allowed? Your thoughts?


Just to take this topic up with my limited knowledge of chemistry.

First off, sodium does start to smolder and catch on fire when exposed to air. It explodes in water. Chlorine is also highly toxic, used in mustard gas.

Now, here's the problem with this sarcastic post, if you didn't know, NaCl is a compound that has reacted. The Alkali metals have one "extra" electron, giving it another shell. The Halogen, Chlorine, is "missing" an electron. However, putting these two together results in the sodium attempting to get rid of the electron, but the chlorine attempting to keep it. Now, since they can't just break apart like that, they get stuck together, and they both kind of have their way, like the noble gases, and aren't as volitile unless seperated back to being just sodium and chlorine. Now, I have little to no knowledge on this, so I'll just go along with this until someone explains this to me more.

Anyways, salt = not dangerous.

White phosphorus = dangerous.

Phosphorus is something extremly dangerous in civilian enviroments. You can't just say "BLAME CARBOMBS" or "I don't care it kills terrorists and the terrorists kill innocents." Firing white phosphorus into a civilian area results in civilian deaths, and since white phosphorus is a powder it can be whipped around the streets of Fallujah.

War isn't what everyone seems to think it is. From the people I've talked to, they think White Phosphorus is just like any other weapon. It isn't. Bullets and bombs explode but can be protected against. White phosporus, however, just burns. According to a US Soldier who fought in Fallujah (Source: Fallujah: The Hidden Massacre) white phosphorus will burn through gas masks. It's not easy to protect yourself from something in a typical Iraq city, open windows, etc. Fallujah wasn't just some hostile target, it had civilians in it. I read the CBC Opinion section, and I saw people that said "Get rid of terrorist's property" and even "When the islamic terrorists stop blowing up innocent Iraqi's at markets and schools perhaps then I'll care if the terrorists get incinerated with WP."

They're missing the point: Not everyone in Fallujah is a terrorist. Civilians and terrorists both died because of the use of this weapon. Maybe you don't care, because you care about your soldiers more than Iraq's citizens. We'll never know the true story, because with embedded journalism, the military can show you the good things, but not the bad things. If anyone knows anything about the Highway of Death, where the US opened fire on a highway of escaping civilians and military personell, then you'll know what I mean. The news showed the tanks and fighters, but not the civilian cars, the dead civilians.

There's also speculation that the Mk-77 napalm bomb was used.

If I made any mistakes with my FACTS, not my opinions, please correct me.


No. Seriously. No.

[Updated on: Thu, 01 December 2005 11:01]

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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180977 is a reply to message #179455] Thu, 01 December 2005 11:06 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Jecht is currently offline  Jecht
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how do you protect yourself from a bomb? By chemical weapon, I think what is implied is Toxin, seeing as how everything is made up of one compound or another.

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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #180978 is a reply to message #179455] Thu, 01 December 2005 11:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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BOMB! OH EM GEE TAKE TEH COVER!

DEY R SHOOTIN TERRORIZTZ PLZ HIDE KTHX!

Possibly, Gbull, =\

White phosphorus, however, goes OMG BURNIGN! AHH WIND R BLOWIN ROUND TEH CORNAR! WUT TEH FUX HAX!


No. Seriously. No.

[Updated on: Thu, 01 December 2005 11:15]

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Re: United States using chemical weapons in Iraq? [message #181100 is a reply to message #179455] Fri, 02 December 2005 06:20 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Nodbugger is currently offline  Nodbugger
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glyde51, what you still don't realize is that WP has a very limited effective area. If they put a grenade in the same area, it would cause more damage. WP when used in the air has enough time to cool down and not cause harm once it gets to the ground, but it if is used near the ground it will explode, and basically burn everything in a 5-10m radius, not a very big blast zone.

If it was ever used as a killing weapon, it was used inside a building where insurgents were.


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